Example sentences of "[vb -s] [adv] go [adv] [adv] [subord] " in BNC.
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1 | However the government has not gone as far as it might have . |
2 | In some areas , mechanisation is replacing labour although in the countryside this has not gone as far as on North American farms . |
3 | ‘ THE shareholders must be hoping the bank has n't gone as far as to give him a company credit card ’ — Labour leader John Smith , on ex-Chancellor Norman Lamont 's new employer , Rothschilds Bank . |
4 | One ARENA spokesman has even gone so far as to suggest that there are nine to ten women in the party for every man . |
5 | One such protagonist has recently gone so far as to claim that Aristotle 's Phantasmata — the mental images that are involved in most or all mental activities — are identical with the symbols on which computational procedures are carried out . |
6 | Although Johnson does not go so far as to claim that the affectless society was responsible for the Moors Murders , she does feel able to argue that the general atmosphere in society at the time had ‘ infected ’ the social system , and that ‘ Brady possibly , Hindley almost certainly , have been victims of fallout ’ . |
7 | Fitzgerald herself does not go so far as to suggest that they should not be used at all . |
8 | Christine Brooke-Rose does not go so far as to disavow authorial creativity altogether , but she too sees technology as the possible key to a breakthrough in how we think about the human subject . |
9 | However he does not go so far as to paraphrase by " see that " , as does Palmer . |
10 | In the meantime the purchase grant of the Museum has been cut by nearly fifty per cent to Pta300 million ( £1.7 million ; £2.9 million ) which does not go very far when acquiring modern works . |
11 | In Canada the Human Rights Act 1978 does not go as far as removing mandatory retirement ages ( although there is pressure growing to do so ) but does make it unlawful to deprive people of employment opportunities on grounds of age , as a result of policies or practices relating to recruitment promotion , training , or other personnel matters . |
12 | So the divorce of sex from reproduction which is erm a very common and even fashionable view in the later twentieth century and of course is one very much facilitated by modern birth control technology and things like that this , this divorce of sex and reproduction is in a way you could say a characteristically male way of looking at things if the male 's er contribution to offspring does n't go much further than the initial fertilization . |
13 | and it , and it does n't go anywhere anyway cos they 'd of |
14 | That 's it , though he does n't go as far as refusing to let you see his picture . |
15 | That 's right , but it does n't go as far as the Glen , |
16 | ‘ The Atlantic does n't go as far as Tennessee , ’ she said . |
17 | But that does n't go very far unless you also examine the structural influences which shape personal behaviour . |
18 | I was and it 's never gone away even though I 've put my weight back on . |